Colombia's government and Marxist FARC rebels announced Saturday they had reached a deal on demining, a stride forward on a key issue to negotiate peace after decades of conflict.
Army and FARC leaders met for the first time in what one diplomat called "unprecedented" talks.
"The government and the FARC have agreed to ask (Norwegian People's Aid) to lead and coordinate a cleanup and decontamination operation: for mines in rural areas as part of the armed conflict," a statement from the parties said, read out by Cuban diplomat Rodolfo Benitez.
Lead government negotiator Humberto de la Calle, a former vice president, stressed that: "our goal is to put an end to the conflict... so the demining proposal is a first step, but a giant one toward peace."
The Colombian conflict has killed 220,000 people and uprooted more than five million since the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) was launched in 1964.
The peace talks, launched in November 2012, have produced partial accords on several issues, but have yet to yield a final deal.
Benitez said the sides agreed to the demining arrangement "as part of the deescalation, and as a confidence-building measure... as well as to create better safety conditions for rural people."
The FARC declared an indefinite, unilateral ceasefire on December 20, but President Juan Manuel Santos has rejected a bilateral ceasefire without a definitive peace deal.
Negotiators seeking to end the more than five-decade guerrilla war at talks in Havana are under growing international pressure to guarantee justice for crimes committed during the conflict.
Last month, former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan warned during a visit with both sides that the International Criminal Court could step in if the final peace deal did not bring justice for victims of the conflict.
Cuba and Norway are guarantors of the Colombian peace process under way in Havana.
Now in recess, the talks will resume March 17.
The FARC admits its insurgency -- Latin America's biggest -- has affected civilians, but denies having committed crimes against humanity or violated international humanitarian law.
The National Liberation Army (ELN), a much smaller rebellion, is not part of the dialogue with the FARC.
The ELN, however, is in preliminary talks with Bogota on a peace process of its own.
Colombia’s government and Marxist FARC rebels announced Saturday they had reached a deal on demining, a stride forward on a key issue to negotiate peace after decades of conflict.
Army and FARC leaders met for the first time in what one diplomat called “unprecedented” talks.
“The government and the FARC have agreed to ask (Norwegian People’s Aid) to lead and coordinate a cleanup and decontamination operation: for mines in rural areas as part of the armed conflict,” a statement from the parties said, read out by Cuban diplomat Rodolfo Benitez.
Lead government negotiator Humberto de la Calle, a former vice president, stressed that: “our goal is to put an end to the conflict… so the demining proposal is a first step, but a giant one toward peace.”
The Colombian conflict has killed 220,000 people and uprooted more than five million since the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) was launched in 1964.
The peace talks, launched in November 2012, have produced partial accords on several issues, but have yet to yield a final deal.
Benitez said the sides agreed to the demining arrangement “as part of the deescalation, and as a confidence-building measure… as well as to create better safety conditions for rural people.”
The FARC declared an indefinite, unilateral ceasefire on December 20, but President Juan Manuel Santos has rejected a bilateral ceasefire without a definitive peace deal.
Negotiators seeking to end the more than five-decade guerrilla war at talks in Havana are under growing international pressure to guarantee justice for crimes committed during the conflict.
Last month, former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan warned during a visit with both sides that the International Criminal Court could step in if the final peace deal did not bring justice for victims of the conflict.
Cuba and Norway are guarantors of the Colombian peace process under way in Havana.
Now in recess, the talks will resume March 17.
The FARC admits its insurgency — Latin America’s biggest — has affected civilians, but denies having committed crimes against humanity or violated international humanitarian law.
The National Liberation Army (ELN), a much smaller rebellion, is not part of the dialogue with the FARC.
The ELN, however, is in preliminary talks with Bogota on a peace process of its own.
